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How to Start a Company in Estonia from France: The Complete 2026 Guideย 

Start an Estonian Company from France

Establishing a business in Estonia from France has become one of the most efficient pathways for French entrepreneurs, digital nomads, and freelancers to run a location-independent, European company. 

Through Estoniaโ€™s e-Residency program, you can manage an Estonian Oรœ (Osaรผhingโ€”the equivalent of a French SARL or EURL) completely online from Paris, Lyon, or anywhere else in the world, avoiding the heavy administrative friction often associated with the French Greffe du Tribunal de Commerce

This 2026 guide provides a step-by-step framework tailored specifically for French tax residents looking to build an Estonian company seamlessly. 

The Reality Check: Who is This Guide For? 

Before jumping in, it is vital to separate myth from reality. Estonia isย not a tax haven, and e-Residency does not grant physical residency or an exemption from French personal taxes.ย 

  • Ideal for: Freelancers, SaaS founders, IT consultants, e-commerce brands, and digital creators who want to bootstrap, reinvest their revenue, and enjoy paperless admin. 
  • Not ideal for: Local physical businesses based in France (e.g., cafรฉs, construction) or entrepreneurs looking for a pure “tax optimization hack” without real business activity. 

Step 1: Secure Your Estonian e-Residency 

The foundational layer of your business is your digital identity. It allows you to sign documents legally, check the register, and file taxes within the EU framework. 

  • Cost: โ‚ฌ150 state fee (plus an optional โ‚ฌ20โ€“50 if picking up at certain foreign hubs). 
  • Processing Time: 6 to 8 weeks. 
  • Where to Apply: Securely via the official Estonian e-Residency portal. 

During the online application, you will need to upload your French passport or Carte dโ€™identitรฉ, a passport-style photo, a motivation statement (a simple explanation of your business model), and your French CV. 

Once approved, you must physically pick up your e-Residency kit. You can select theย Estonian Embassy in Parisย as your pickup location. The kitย containsย a digital ID card, a USB card reader, and your secure PIN codes.ย 

Step 2: Establish Your Corporate Base (Virtual Office) 

Estonian law dictates that every registered company must have a physical legal address and a designated local Contact Person (kontaktisik) in Estonia. This function acts like a commercial domiciliation agent in France. 

Because you live in France, you cannot use your French home address for the company register. You will need to hire an authorized Estonian service provider (such as Xolo, Enty, 1Office, or e-Residency Hub). 

  • Cost: โ‚ฌ200 to โ‚ฌ400 per year. 
  • What it does: They provide an address in Tallinn, receive your official mail, scan it, and forward it to you digitally. 

Step 3: Register Your Oรœ (Private Limited Company) 

With your e-Residency card reader plugged into your computer, logging into the Estonian e-Business Register takes minutes. 

COMPANY CREATION AT A GLANCE 

Legal Form Oรœ (Osaรผhing) 

Minimum Share Capital – โ‚ฌ0.01 per shareholder 

State Registration Fee – โ‚ฌ265 

Approval Timeline – 1 to 3 business days 

The Setup Process: 

  1. Choose a Name: Use the register’s tool to check that your company name is completely unique and doesn’t conflict with European trademarks. 
  1. Define Activities: Select your main area of activity using the EMTAK system (the Estonian equivalent of France’s Code APE/NAF). 
  1. Contribute Share Capital: While the legal minimum capital has been reduced to just โ‚ฌ0.01, any amount under โ‚ฌ2,500 means shareholders carry personal liability up to that โ‚ฌ2,500 threshold in a worst-case bankruptcy scenario. The capital must be paid directly into the companyโ€™s account upon setup. 
  1. Sign and Pay: Digitally sign the application using your e-Residency card and pay the โ‚ฌ265 state fee

Step 4: Set Up Business Banking 

Having an operational corporate bank account is essential before you can invoice clients. Traditional Estonian brick-and-mortar banks (like LHV or Coop Pank) generally require a physical trip to Tallinn and a demonstrated physical tie to Estonia. 

Therefore, most e-residents opt for EU-compliant fintech business platforms that accept e-residents smoothly: 

  • Wise Business: Highly popular, offers local Euro IBANs, and integrates directly with the Estonian business portal. 
  • Revolut Business / Payhawk: Excellent options for spending cards, multi-currency processing, and expense tracking. 

Note: Your financial institution must be an EEA (European Economic Area) authorized credit or payment institution to register share capital properly. 

Step 5: Master the Estonian Tax System 

Estoniaโ€™s corporate tax structure is entirely unique within the European Union and represents a powerful vehicle for business growth. 

0% Tax on Retained Earnings 

Unlike France, where corporate tax (Impรดt sur les sociรฉtรฉs – IS) is levied on net profits at the end of every fiscal year, Estonia levies 0% corporate income tax on retained and reinvested profits. 

Your company can generate profits, leave them in the business bank account, and use 100% of that capital to buy equipment, fund marketing, or hire freelancers without losing a portion to annual corporate taxes. 

Distributed Profits (Dividends) 

Taxation is triggered only when you choose to distribute profits out of the company to yourself. 

  • Corporate Distribution Tax: Distributed dividends are taxed at a flat rate of 22% (calculated as 22/78 of the net payout). 

Value Added Tax (VAT) 

  • The Threshold: Your company must register for an Estonian VAT number once its taxable turnover crosses โ‚ฌ40,000 within a calendar year. 
  • The Rate: The standard Estonian VAT rate is 24%
  • If you are selling digital services or B2B SaaS across Europe, you can utilize the EU OSS (One-Stop Shop) scheme via your Estonian portal to declare and pay VAT collected from consumers across different EU member states in one single place. 

Crucial Cross-Border Tax Rules for French Residents 

If you reside permanently in France while running an Estonian company, you must structure your business with French tax laws in mind to avoid common regulatory pitfalls. 

1. Permanent Establishment (ร‰tablissement Stable) 

Under the France-Estonia double tax treaty, if a company is legally registered in Estonia but its primary director makes all strategic decisions from a kitchen table or office in France, the French tax authority (Direction gรฉnรฉrale des Finances publiques – DGFiP) may argue that the company has a Permanent Establishment in France. 

If they successfully make this claim, the portion of profits generated by your activities in France could be subjected to French corporate taxes. To mitigate this risk: 

  • Ensure your company focuses on international digital clients rather than localized French operations. 
  • Consider working with an experienced cross-border accountant to monitor where value is actively created. 

2. Personal Income & Dividends in France 

When you pay yourself a dividend from your Estonian company, you are receiving foreign income as a French tax resident. 

  • You must declare these dividends on your French tax return. 
  • By default, they are subject to the French flat tax (Prรฉlรจvement Forfaitaire Unique – PFU or “Flat Tax”) of 30% (12.8% income tax + 17.2% social contributions). 
  • Good news: The double tax treaty prevents double taxation by offering a tax credit in France for corporate taxes already paid during distribution in Estonia. 

Step 6: Ongoing Compliance and Upkeep 

Estoniaโ€™s administrative ecosystem is highly automated, but it requires strict discipline. 

  • Accounting & Monthly Filings: If your company has an Estonian VAT number or pays salaries, you must submit tax declarations (TSD and KMD forms) by the 10th and 20th of every month
  • Annual Report (Majandusaasta aruanne): Every Estonian company must submit an annual financial report to the Business Register within six months of the end of its financial yearโ€”even if the company had zero business activity. 

To handle this seamlessly, most founders bundle their virtual office with a dedicated accounting service plan from their service provider, which typically ranges from โ‚ฌ50 to โ‚ฌ150+ per month depending on invoice volume. 

Summary Checklist: Launching Your Business 

  • [ ] Apply for e-Residency online (โ‚ฌ150). 
  • [ ] Collect your digital ID card at the Estonian Embassy in Paris. 
  • [ ] Hire an Estonian virtual office service provider (~โ‚ฌ250/year). 
  • [ ] Choose an available business name and register your Oรœ online (โ‚ฌ265). 
  • [ ] Set up a digital business banking account (e.g., Wise or Revolut). 
  • [ ] Deposit your share capital and initiate your business. 
  • [ ] Apply for an Estonian VAT number once your turnover hits โ‚ฌ40,000. 
  • [ ] Pair with an accountant to handle your monthly filings and French cross-border tax compliance. 

Need Expert Guidance on Launching Your Estonian Business? 

Navigating cross-border taxation, managing local compliance, and structuring an international company from France requires meticulous planning to avoid compliance pitfalls like French Permanent Establishment claims. 

Get in touch withย the team at Helvetios.com today.ย Our cross-border corporate structure specialists will help you assess your business model, choose the right service providers, and seamlessly integrate your Estonian Oรœ with your French tax profile.ย 

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